Abstract :
Electric propulsion is a spacecraft propulsion technology offering higher exhaust velocities and higher thrust efficiency than classical chemical rockets. Such technology allows for high total impulse missions with reduced propellant mass consumption, but it requires a power generation system that becomes heavier and heavier with thrust magnitude. As a result, the design of an electric propulsion mission cannot ignore the spacecraft mass breakdown because it might happen that power generation system, propellant, and other spacecraft subsystems result in a too low or even null payload mass fraction. The paper presents a semianalytic optimization of the design of an electric powered spacecraft identifying those missions more suited for a given thruster and/or power generation system technology. The relations presented, moreover, can also be used to identify the best thruster for delivering a given payload mass into a target orbit in a prescribed time. A basic spacecraft mass breakdown and analytic closed form approximations are used to identify spacecraft optimal configurations intended as the best combinations of power level, thruster characteristics, and thrust duration resulting in the maximum payload mass fraction achievable for a given electric propulsion mission.
Keywords :
aerospace propulsion; approximation theory; electric propulsion; optimisation; propellants; space power generation; analytic closed form approximations; classical chemical rockets; electric powered spacecraft design; electric propulsion spacecraft optimal configuration; exhaust velocity; null payload mass fraction; power generation system technology; power level; reduced propellant mass consumption; semianalytic optimization approach; spacecraft mass breakdown; spacecraft propulsion technology; spacecraft subsystems; thrust duration; thrust efficiency; thrust magnitude; thruster characteristics; total impulse missions; Equations; Mathematical model; Payloads; Power generation; Propulsion; Space vehicles; Structural engineering; Electric propulsion; low thrust; optimization; spacecraft mass budget;